The Invisible Man In The Battle Royal, By Ralph Ellison

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In the novel Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison, a black narrator, also known as the invisible man, experiences a series of traumatic events in his life that make him “invisible” in society. The invisible man has described his invisibility to bring both disempowerment and freedom. Although these two aspects oppose each other, the invisible man shows how they can also coincide. Through the invisible man’s alienation from society, he illuminates what it means to be “blind” and the importance of individual identity.
The Battle Royal scene in chapter one demonstrates how the invisible man’s and white men’s blindness contributes to the invisible man’s disempowerment. The Battle Royal is a violent fistfight in which the narrator and nine other black men were forced to partake in. The young men are literally blindfolded during the fight. Blindfolding the men metaphorically stands for their inability to see past the manipulative kindness of the white men. The invisible man is …show more content…

The invisible man says that his time in the hole has been a period of “hibernation.” To animals, hibernation is a period in which they escape from harsh environmental conditions of wintertime, going into a deep state of peaceful slumber as the storm rages on the outside. Ultimately, the animals are able to survive extreme conditions and are ready to continue with their lives after awakening, rejuvenated from hibernation. Metaphorically speaking, hibernation to the invisible man is for the purpose of broadening his knowledge and regaining strength to once again face the prejudiced world outside his underground hole that was once his “home.” Eventually, the invisible man determines to arise from hibernation with a complex identity, acknowledging that if he is unable to be himself, he will have no lasting

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